permut.wordpress.com
Permutations | A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. | Page 2
https://permut.wordpress.com/page/2
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. Neal Caren is on github, replication in social science! December 11, 2012. I’m passionate about open-source science, so I had to give Big Ups to Neal Caren who I just learned is sharing code on github. His latest offering essentially replicates the Mark Regnerus study of children whose parents had same-sex relationships. The writeup of this exercise is at Scatterplot. My previous posts on github and sharing code are here. October 23, 2012.
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Which R packages are good for what social network analysis? | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2013/10/08/which-r-packages-are-good-for-what-social-network-analysis
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. Which R packages are good for what social network analysis? Newbies to social network analysis in R should check out this great concise description from Michal Bojanowski on the SOCNET email list. He writes:. And at tutorials on e.g.:- statnet website ( http:/ www.statnet.org/. Igraph homepage ( http:/ igraph.sourceforge.net/. R labs by McFarland et al ( http:/ sna.stanford.edu/rlabs.php. Feed You can leave a response. From your own site.
permut.wordpress.com
On the relationship between social cohesion and structural holes | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2013/10/28/on-the-relationship-between-social-cohesion-and-structural-holes
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. On the relationship between social cohesion and structural holes. In a continuing series “Highlights of SOCNET” I offer you Vincenzo Nicosia’s email summarizing his cool recently published work:. In a recent work appeared in Journal of Statistical Physics:. V Latora, V. Nicosia, P. Panzarasa “Social cohesion, structural. Holes, and a tale of two measures”, J. Stat. Phys. 151 (3-4), 745. 2013) ( Arxiv version. Feed You can leave a response.
permut.wordpress.com
Neal Caren is on github, replication in social science! | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2012/12/11/neal-caren-is-on-github-replication-in-social-science
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. Neal Caren is on github, replication in social science! I’m passionate about open-source science, so I had to give Big Ups to Neal Caren who I just learned is sharing code on github. His latest offering essentially replicates the Mark Regnerus study of children whose parents had same-sex relationships. The writeup of this exercise is at Scatterplot. My previous posts on github and sharing code are here. Feed You can leave a response.
permut.wordpress.com
a case for single-blind review | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2013/01/23/a-case-for-single-blind-review
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. A case for single-blind review. Cross posted from here. So, let’s start with a case for single blind review. I think think there are quite a few merits to single blind review (for a few other takes, see here. I won’t presume to cover them all here, but i will get a start. Feel free to add others, or tell me i’m completely off my rocker in the comments. For now a final point that i saw elsewhere on the web this morning, but have definitel...
permut.wordpress.com
My Old Book Review of Six Degrees | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2009/10/07/my-old-book-review-of-six-degrees
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. My Old Book Review of Six Degrees. I wrote a review of Duncan Watts book on social networks, for a class and thought I might as well share it here, even if it is a little out of date:. Networks are everywhere. In the first chapter of Six Degrees. In the second half he presents a network perspective for a wide range of topics such as…. Speculation, social decision making, and organizations. His early collaborators were mathematicians, phy...
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Statistical Teaching (bleg) | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2012/11/20/statistical-teaching-bleg
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. I have plenty of “standard” examples i could draw from, but they’re likely bored with the one’s i think of first by this point in the term. So, what are yours? It’s fine if you just have the numbers, i can convert them to visualizations, but if you have visual pointers, all the better. This entry was posted on Tuesday, November 20th, 2012 at 3:44 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. Feed You can leave a response. From your own site.
ugow.wordpress.com
First List | Urban Geography on the Web
https://ugow.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/7
Urban Geography on the Web. A simple step to organize Urban Geography, studies and planning on the web. List 2 →. December 11, 2010. A personal blog for Austin Kocher, a graduate student of geography at ohio State University, it covers an array of social science issues and GIS. This blog will seek to explore the struggle in Black geographies. Building Blog Written by Geof Manaugh covering Architectural Conjecture, Urban Speculation and Landscape Future. Environmental and Urban Economics. Looks at art in ...
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Alphabetical | Urban Geography on the Web
https://ugow.wordpress.com/alphabetical
Urban Geography on the Web. A simple step to organize Urban Geography, studies and planning on the web. A listing of all blogs found to date. Centered on creating successful and sustainable mixed use projects in Greenfield or redevelopment locations. Besides the blog it has a list of resources you might find useful. A personal blog for Austin Kocher, a graduate student of geography at ohio State University, it covers an array of social science issues and GIS. Catlin Gabel Urban Studies Blog. Looks at urb...
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forecasting poorly | Permutations
https://permut.wordpress.com/2013/03/23/forecasting-poorly
A place to discuss mathematics, sociology, and their intersections. Moderately tweaked excerpt from here. How hard would it be to get ALL of the first round games in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament wrong? I mean, that would be pretty tough, right? Given that among the multiple millions of brackets submitted to ESPN this year,. Got all the first round games right, it would seem hard to do the inverse too, right? I think we’re going to have to put this to the test. Something like -1 point fo...8230;] ...
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